Branko Skof1, Vedran Hadzic1, Edvin Dervisevic1
1Univerzitet u Ljubljani, Fakultet za sport, Slovenia
FREQUENCY AND RISK FACTORS FOR OVERUSE INJURIES OF LOWER EXTREMITY IN SLOVENIAN RECREATIVE RUNNERS
POVREDE ZBOG PRENAPREZANJA I NJIHOVI UZROCI U REKREATIVNIH TRKAČA U REPUBLICI SLOVENIJI
Sport Mont 2012, X(34-35-36),
354-359
Running is probably the most frequent form of regular physical activity in the
general population. Unfortunatelly the running related injuries are also quite frequent
and different authors are reporting the injury rates between 19,4 % to 79,3 %
(Knobloch, Yoon, & Vogt, 2008). The purpose of our cross-sectional study was to
evalute the injury rates and anatomical distribution of lower extremity injuries in
slovenian runners of different gender, age and training level. Unique injury report
form was used to evaluate data of 1.323 recreative runners (50.3 % females and 49.7
% males, average age 37.8 ± 10.9 let). The results have shown that:
- During the previous year 53.5 % of runners had experienced at least one
running related injury that caused them to miss from regular running for at
least one week.
- The proportion of uninjured female runners during the previous year was
significantly lower when compared to male runners (59.1 % females vs. 40.9
% males, Chi square = 0.000)
- The age and the running training volume were not related with injury rates.
- The injury rates were related with the training level (Chi square = 0.024),
which means that well trained runners had less injuries compared with less
trained counterparts. Same was surprisingly true for young still unexperienced
runners.
- The injuries were of acute nature in 59.3 % cases while 28.9 % runners
reported overuse injuries
- The rate of overuse injuries is increasing with age of the runner as with the
over 50y old runners the prevalence of overuse injuries was 40.9 %, while in
the below 35y runners the prevalence was only 26.4 % (Chi square = 0.014).
The running related overuse injuries of lower extremity are in many cases
related to inappropriate training approach (too qucikly, too much; too quickly, too
fast). N/A
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